Elon should prove that Sandy Hook was indeed a false flag.
When news broke that InfoWars was sold to the satirical rag The Onion, liberal NPCs throughout the world rejoiced at what they saw as the irony of the ultimate demise of Alex Jones' media empire. Following an emergency hearing in the wake of that supposed "sale", their reveling has come to an abrupt halt as questions about the legality of the auction process of InfoWars proved that the overzealous celebration was not just premature but the epitome of everything Jones was warned against for over 25 years. During an emergency hearing on Thursday just hours after MSM pushed headlines about The Onion's acquisition of InfoWars, Federal Bankruptcy Judge Christopher M. Lopez expressed his concerns over the transparency of the auction process. Lopez set a subsequent hearing for next week to examine questions over whether the auction was conducted fairly, transparently, and most importantly; legally. Lopez said the upcoming hearing will determine whether bankruptcy trustees running the auction executed “a full and fair process" and will ultimately determine whether or not the sale of InfoWars to The Onion will be approved.
Following the scheduling of next week's evidentiary hearing, Jones returned to the InfoWars set after broadcasting from the studio of the Alex Jones Network that he set up as a contingency when the writing on the wall of InfoWars demise became impossible to deny. This marks the second time that Jones has been illegally removed from the InfoWars studios, following an episode in May in which federal bankruptcy officials attempted to shut the network down without a court order. Jones stood his ground again as he had in May when he issued a broadcast across his various channels on X detailing the latest development in his Homeric bankruptcy saga.
According to Jones, trustees in charge of the auction conducted the entire process under cloak and dagger. While bidders had the right to submit offers for InfoWars under seal until November 8th, Jones asserts that the secrecy of that process was exploited by the trustees. He contends that not only did they not award the sale of InfoWars to the highest bigger but that The Onion's bid was vindictively facilitated by the families of the Sandy Hook school shooting victims whose judgment against Jones in the amount of $1.5 billion has led to the bankruptcy proceedings. According to Jones, those families leveraged the $1.5 billion award from the judgement that is presently on appeal as a form of credit — effectively attempting to purchase InfoWars with Jones' own money. . .
Source (zerohedge.com)